Hello everyone,
I wanted to share that there is a #flashrom channel on discord. It existed for a while, but I only very recently learned about it. I suspect it might be the same for many people who have no idea the channel exists.
I updated the Contacts page (old and new) with the info: see https://www.flashrom.org/Contact#Discord or check the latest doc/contact.rst in your repo, and follow the invite link.
The channel is on the coreboot server, so if you join you get all of coreboot and flashrom channels in one place, which is convenient.
See you there,
Anastasia Klimchuk aklm@chromium.org writes:
I wanted to share that there is a #flashrom channel on discord. It existed for a while, but I only very recently learned about it. I suspect it might be the same for many people who have no idea the channel exists.
The channel is on the coreboot server, so if you join you get all of coreboot and flashrom channels in one place, which is convenient.
I am surprised to see a proprietary service being used, given the aims of the coreboot community. (This is merely an expression of surprise; I don't have the spare energy to try to set up something Free-er.)
On Fri, May 19, 2023 at 11:03 AM Greg Troxel gdt@lexort.com wrote:
Anastasia Klimchuk aklm@chromium.org writes:
I wanted to share that there is a #flashrom channel on discord. It existed for a while, but I only very recently learned about it. I suspect it might be the same for many people who have no idea the channel exists.
The channel is on the coreboot server, so if you join you get all of coreboot and flashrom channels in one place, which is convenient.
I am surprised to see a proprietary service being used, given the aims of the coreboot community. (This is merely an expression of surprise; I don't have the spare energy to try to set up something Free-er.)
It's not just the energy, but also opportunity cost of course.
My general answer is that the coreboot project is about creating boot firmware, and not about chat clients. coreboot has been on Discord for a fair amount of time now, and even much longer on Slack. None of us give up on having a phone even though the phone network is not open source either. The challenge is not to find a solution but to find a solution that scales to the size of the communities and to the various needs (ie. have something that works well both on a computer and on mobile)
We generally have gone through phases of trying free tooling and this topic keeps coming up of course. Especially for our community video conferences we would love to use solutions like jitsi as well. Problem is that it never scaled reliably to more than 3 people.
I really encourage people interested in creating free communication tools to join these projects and make a difference there. Projects like flashrom and coreboot would certainly benefit.
Stefan